Asia’s rice mountain to pressure prices as buyers lose appetite

Wednesday, 18 July 2012 01:15 -     - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}

SINGAPORE (Reuters): Asia’s bulging stocks of rice, coupled with the waning appetite of top buyers, will keep a lid on prices of the grain in coming months, promising relief to food importers grappling with a one-third jump in the prices of corn and wheat since mid-June.

Top rice exporters India and Thailand are sitting on hefty stockpiles of the grain ahead of new crop harvests, while leading buyers Manila and Jakarta are likely to reduce purchases amid bumper domestic crops.

A limit on rice prices will ensure sufficient supplies for some of the poorest nations in Asia and Africa, all but ruling out the kind of panic buying seen in 2008, when fears of supply shortfall drove Thai rice to all-time highs of $1,000 a ton.

“The dynamics are totally different – rice is not going to go the way corn, soybeans and wheat have gone,” said Darren Cooper, a senior economist at theA worker climbs on a pile of rice stock inside a warehouse of the government National Food Authority (NFA) in Bicutan, south of Manila, in this September 28, 2010 file photo. Asia’s bulging stocks of rice, coupled with the waning appetite of top buyers, will keep a lid on prices of the grain in coming months, promising relief to food importers grappling with a one-third jump in the prices of corn and wheat since mid-June. REUTERS International Grains Council in London. “It is the picture we see on the supply side which is really bearish for the market.” The council, a research body funded by buyers and producers, expects world rice trade in 2012 to fall about 4.7 per cent on the year, to around 34 million tons, as top buyers reduce purchases because of the better yields brought by good weather.

Thailand, usually the world’s biggest rice exporter, is estimated to have accumulated a record 10 million tons of rice, or nearly a third of annual global trade, after a government intervention scheme made exports unviable.

In a populist move designed to shore up its support, the Thai government bought rice from farmers at prices on average 40 percent higher than prevailing market rates, stuffing the country’s silos with grain that has proved difficult to sell as supplies pile up elsewhere.

In India, stocks of rice stood at 30.7 million tons on 1 July, enough to meet world demand for almost a year, despite the country having sold some five million tons since last September. That is driving down prices. Actively-traded 25 per cent broken Vietnamese rice is being offered around $377.5 a ton, down 16 per cent since the beginning of the year. Indian common rice varieties are quoted around $375 to $425 per tonne, making exports attractive.

In contrast, benchmark Chicago corn and wheat have surged close to 40 per cent in the last four weeks as a worsening drought in the U.S. grain belt curbs yields with each passing day.

Thai authorities are desperately seeking buyers for their rice before new-crop supplies start flowing in from October and the country is left with few options but to sell at a discounted prices in government-to-government deals. “They have to sell in order to make space before new supplies start,” said one trader from Bangkok. “Everyone is waiting to see what they do.”

But the Thai Government sold none of the 250,535 tons of rice offered from its stocks in a tender last month.

As Thailand sits on its expensive rice, Indian exporters will capitalise on the situation, even if the country receives sparse rainfall from the monsoon season now underway.

“Indian supplies will continue even if the monsoon rains fail this year as the rice stocks are really huge,” said Vijay Setia, former president of the Rice Exporters’ Association of India.

Traders in Vietnam expect rice prices to stay under pressure as domestic supplies rise and India continues exports. “Prices in Vietnam will depend on Indian rice and only have a chance to rise if India stops exporting,” said one trader at a foreign firm in Ho Chi Minh City.

Indonesia is unlikely to import rice in 2012 and is forecast to have a surplus of 5.5 million tons of the staple by year’s end, state procurement agency Bulog said this month.

The Philippines, which was the world’s largest rice importer in 2010, aims to be self-sufficient in rice by the end of 2013.

“Next year, I think we could reduce rice imports to not more than 100,000 tons, just enough to make sure we have ample stocks at the National Food Authority,” said Dante Delima, head of the government’s National Rice Program.

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